Donnerstag, 20. November 2025
11:00 - 12:00
Online

 

Experimental paradigms in cognitive neuroscience often rely on reductionist designs, presenting isolated stimuli stripped of spatial and temporal context. Yet in natural vision, context fundamentally shapes how elementary features are perceived and integrated. In this talk, I will present research showing that visual perception depends on context at three levels: spatial and configural structure, temporal regularities across multiple timescales, and internal brain states that modulate spatiotemporal integration. I will then introduce the framework of spatiotemporal routines, proposing that perception arises from dynamic interactions between external context and internal states. Finally, I will outline future directions combining neuroimaging and computational modeling to understand individual differences in contextual integration.

Speaker

David Pascucci - Psychophysics and Neural Dynamics Lab, Department of Radiology, Lausanne University Hospital (CHUV) and University of Lausanne (UNIL), Lausanne, Switzerland.
The Sense Innovation and Research Center, Lausanne, Switzerland.

David Pascucci is a cognitive neuroscientist who studied Experimental Psychology at the University of Florence and earned his Ph.D. in Cognitive Science at the Center for Mind/Brain Sciences (University of Trento) in 2014. His research focuses on visual perception, attention, and brain plasticity using techniques such as fMRI and EEG. After postdoctoral work in Verona and Fribourg, he received an SNSF Ambizione grant in 2019 and became a Principal Investigator at EPFL. Since 2024, he has been an Assistant Professor at the University Hospital of Lausanne (CHUV), the University of Lausanne (UNIL), and the Sense Innovation and Research Center.

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